5 episodes

Part of a series of lectures by academics in the Centre for Scottish and Celtic Studies at the University of Glasgow addressing the question of Scotland’s historic Britishness from different disciplinary perspectives.

How British is Scotland‪?‬ University of Glasgow

    • Education
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

Part of a series of lectures by academics in the Centre for Scottish and Celtic Studies at the University of Glasgow addressing the question of Scotland’s historic Britishness from different disciplinary perspectives.

    Celtic Perspectives on Multiculturalism

    Celtic Perspectives on Multiculturalism

    Thomas Clancy, Professor of Celtic at the University of Glasgow, discusses multiculturalism in early medieval Scotland, arguing that Scotland was the one of the most linguistically diverse countries in Europe in this period. He argues that such diversity should be embraced instead of the pursuit of an inflexible ‘essence’ of Scottish or British identity.

    • 54 min
    Flying the Flag for the Union? Scotland 2014: Yes or No, What Happens Next?

    Flying the Flag for the Union? Scotland 2014: Yes or No, What Happens Next?

    Professor Murray Pittock, the Bradley Chair of English Literature at the University of Glasgow, looks at the different possibilities for Scotland’s future and its relationship with the rest of the UK in the wake of the 2014 independence referendum. He argues that there are risks in all scenarios, but that a no vote is the biggest risk of all.

    • 56 min
    Archaeological Origins of Scotland

    Archaeological Origins of Scotland

    Stephen Driscoll, Professor of Historical Archaeology, and Ewan Campbell, Senior Lecturer in Archaeology, from the University of Glasgow explore how the concept of Scottish nationality is applied in the field of archaeology. Professor Driscoll emphasises how difficult it is to ascribe Scottishness to archaeological finds, but notes how they have been packaged as Scottish in modern times. Dr Campbell looks at the varied origin myths of the Scottish nation, noting that identity was fluid in the early medieval period. He also asserts that Scotland was culturally conversant with other parts of Europe in this period, and only peripheral in a strictly geographical sense.

    • 46 min
    A Gendered Perspective

    A Gendered Perspective

    Professor Lynn Abrams, Chair of Modern History at the University of Glasgow, shows how a number of Scottish women of the inter-war period rose from the national arena to take prominent roles in international pacificist movements. By doing so, they transcended national boundaries without expressing discontentment with the British state.

    • 46 min
    Britain and Scottish Independence in the Middle Ages

    Britain and Scottish Independence in the Middle Ages

    Professor Dauvit Broun, Chair of Scottish History, examines some of the ways in which medieval Scots engaged with the concept of Britishness. He argues that Britishness was not uniform, and that medieval Scots were able to identify with and express distinctive forms of Britishness which emphasised separateness from other parts of the British Isles.

    • 52 min

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